The title is not exact, but I can't express it better in a single line.
- I actually know how to change git commit message like here.
- But I know it always changes the SHA-1 too, which I want to avoid.
I only want to see a different message in git-log
. I thought it could be done somehow using git-notes
, but I haven't managed it.
Explanation:
I need it in order to fix errors in the commit messages. I always write there the name of a document containing my communication with the customer (it looks just like T1234 Replace foo by bar
). The communication tends to be quite long, so I can loose a lot of time till I find out I was being mislead by wrong document name in the commit message.
Use of git-notes
It looks like git-notes
in fact works as stated here. However I always use
git log --oneline
so I never see it. Concerning the comment about making git lie to the user: IMHO, this would be acceptable when this happened only when using a special switch like --replace-messages-by-notes
, wouldn't it? As I always use an alias instead of using git log
directly, I'd get what I want without typing a lot.
Do you think it's a reasonable feature request or would you recommend another workflow to me?
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